Introduction
- The introduction consists of one or more sentences describing the anatomical structure in its entirety.
- The labeled term should appear in the first sentence, in bold, and if possible in the form "name of the structure (eponym; acronym but not systematic) is a muscle etc.".
- There should be no line breaks or bullet points in this introduction.
- And the size of this introduction should be between 250 and 350 characters (including spaces).
Contents of the definition
- The definition should favor a short format.
- Do not use italics in definitions, even in another language.
- The definition must be specific to the structure. Consider hyperlinking any child or adelphi structures that may derive from the structure, rather than describing them in the same definition.
Ideally, hyperlink only the relevant structures you cite in your definition (and not necessarily all the structures), and link them only the first time you mention them in the definition.
You don't have to specifically mention the name of the structure you're quoting.
In a vet-Anatomy definition, it's interesting to compare the animal structure with a similar structure in humans (for comparative anatomy).
Sources/references must be entered in ENGLISH and in VANCOUVER style.
- To do this, you can go directly to PubMed, where you can find all the articles published in the medical or veterinary field. PubMed offers a "cite" button (cf) which allows you to format the references to this article in Vancouver style. All you have to do is copy the proposed text.
=> Arrange sources alphabetically by author's name (and if several references have the same author, arrange them chronologically).
Don't list these sources as bullet points or indents, simply go to the line between each source.
⚠️ Always remember to respect the punctuation and spaces specific to this nomenclature.
Contributors
After writing the content of your definition, remember to add, in the following order, First Name, Last Name.
If you do not enter this information, then IMAIOS will be indicated as the default creator of the add-on.
Nomenclature of sources
Sources/references must be entered in ENGLISH and in VANCOUVER style.
- To do this, you can go directly to PubMed, where you can find all the articles published in the medical or veterinary field. PubMed offers a "cite" button which allows you to format the references to this article in Vancouver style. All you have to do is copy the proposed text.
=> Arrange sources alphabetically by author's name (and if several references have the same author, arrange them chronologically).
Don't list these sources as bullet points or indents, simply go to the line between each source.
⚠️ Always remember to respect the punctuation and spaces specific to this nomenclature.
📖 Quoting a book
Here's what you need to include:
- Last name First initial of first name(s)
or if several authors: Surname First initial of first name(s), et al. - Book title
- Publication no.
- City of publication: Publisher
- Year of publication
📑 Cite a book chapter
- Last name First initial of first name(s)
or if several authors: Surname First initial of first name(s), et al. - Book title
- Publication no.
- City of publication: Publisher
- Year of publication
- Chapter title; chapter pages
📰 Cite a paper article
- Last name First initial of first name(s)
or if several authors: Surname First initial of first name(s), et al. - Article title
- Journal title (which may be abbreviated to the official abbreviation if known)
- Year of publication
- Volume (Number): pages
- [PMID ou DOI]
- Last name First initial of first name(s)
or if several authors: Surname First initial of first name(s), et al. - Title of thesis or dissertation [thesis]
- City: University or school
- Year
- Number of pages
🌍 Cite a website
- Last name First initial of first name(s)
or if several authors: Surname First initial of first name(s), et al. - Title of site or page [online]
- Date updated [date the site was consulted]
- Available on: url